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Kristina Mladenovic Offers Hope to Keep the French Open Trophy at Home - The New York Times

posted onMay 28, 2017
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Article snippet: Kristina Mladenovic might have been a German tennis star if her father, Dragan, an Olympic gold medalist in team handball for Yugoslavia, had decided to make a move to the German Handball Bundesliga, the top European league, in 1992. Instead, Dragan chose to leave Serbia to play in the city of Dunkirk in northern France and ended up staying for 12 seasons with his growing family, which added Kristina in 1993. “It’s true that this could all have turned out very differently,” Kristina Mladenovic said in a recent interview. “It is a coincidence in a way that I was born in France, but I’m delighted.” With the French Open set to begin on Sunday, the French are increasingly delighted, too. At 24, Mladenovic is in the midst of her most convincing season and at a career-high ranking of No. 14 after reaching clay-court finals in Stuttgart, Germany, and Madrid. Nicknamed Kiki, she is one of tennis’s big personalities and polyglots (she speaks five languages and understands a sixth), and she has an unexpectedly large opportunity. Though she has yet to get past the quarterfinals in a Grand Slam singles tournament, the instability at the top of the women’s game means there is ample room for all manner of childhood dreams to become reality at Roland Garros. No Frenchwoman has won the French Open since Mary Pierce in 2000. Amélie Mauresmo, who reached No. 1 and was a stellar clay-court player elsewhere, routinely crumpled under the home-Slam pressure. Marion Bartoli, who went o... Link to the full article to read more

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